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    1. And all of these years I just thought I was smelling rain on the dry ground….

    2. I love that smell! turns out we are like sharks for smelling water on dirt.

    3. Berlchicken on

      Related fun fact: humans are many many times more sensitive to detecting petrichor than sharks are at detecting blood. No evolutionary benefit, just a biological anomaly afaik.

      Edit: On reflection, I was misremembering the evolutionary benefit side of things. As some of you have pointed out.

    4. A_Snow_Mexican on

      One of my favorite smells along with lilac and petrol. (Not together)

    5. Gold-Writer-129 on

      In the southwest part of the states {Cali, Nevada, Utah, Arizona, and parts of Mexico,} it’s called Larrea Tridentata – aka the creosote bush. <3 Tiny fact: If you cup your hands around your mouth and breathe on a creosote bush, you can smell its unique perfume. Many people like to say it is the smell of desert rain. 🙂

    6. _Saucey_Sauce_ on

      No way it’s JUST geosmin. There are so many plants and fungi that release scents when rained on

    7. Strider-of-Storm on

      Wait, so that’s why Risk of Rain planet is called Petrichor V

      O_O

    8. Wait, what? We actually can learn something useful on Reddit! This unique smell has been baffling me all my life. Thanks OP.

    9. I absolutely adore the smell of petrichor on a hot summer evening! It makes me feel incredibly nostalgic and sweetly melancholic.

    10. Theredwalker666 on

      Did my entire PhD on this compound. Great when you’re hiking, terrible in your seafood.

    11. EL_overthetransom on

      I’ve tried many times to find a petrichor scented candle. The problem is humans are so sensitive to it they all have too much geosmin, so they all smell pungent and awful.

    12. And our noses can identify that smell better than many other smells. Mostly because of an evolutionary survival adaptation.

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